Affordability
Co-Buying Real Estate: An Alternate Approach to Affordable Housing
Caddis Collaborative recently talked with Sarah Wells, broker associate and partner at Live Work Denver, about the firm’s efforts to advocate for co-buying models in Colorado. Sarah is a founder of Queen City Cooperative, and we are excited about her work to address financial barriers to home ownership and to find ways to build community and connection through housing.
Building at Ponderosa: Caddis Volunteers with Habitat for Humanity
Caddis Collaborative staff recently had the chance to volunteer with Habitat for Humanity at the Ponderosa Mobile Home Park’s redevelopment. It was a great chance to build the team, contribute to our community, and help construct a project we had designed.
Reducing Our Carbon Footprint and Increasing Affordability: Rethinking Transportation in Multifamily Projects
To address climate change, we need to encourage multiple modes of transportation – driving vehicles that shift away from the internal combustion engine; using car share programs; taking public transportation; and biking and walking to meet daily needs. A key principle at Caddis is to design now for the world we want to see in the future. This post explains how to think about these alternatives to gas-powered vehicles.
Bedrooms Are For People: Housing Justice in Boulder, Colorado
“Let’s make housing that works for people.” So says Eric Budd, an organizer for Bedrooms Are For People, an all-volunteer housing justice organization in Boulder.
American Cities Can Learn and Evolve
The fifth post in our series “Evolving Toward Inclusive Cities” makes a case for concerted, intentional, conscious change. Here at Caddis Collaborative, we believe that everything is on the drawing table. These structures aren’t “natural” – they’re human-made. People created these structures, policies, legislation – and people can undo them.
A Vision for Change: Tulsa on the Move
The fourth post in our series “Evolving Toward Inclusive Cities” looks at the legacy of the “Tulsa Massacre,” when the thriving Black community known as Greenwood – or Black Wall Street – was viciously attacked by white mobs. Today Greenwood is an example of past oppression, current bonds against which residents are straining, and the opportunity for change. Caddis talked with Tulsa mayoral candidate Greg Robinson, who is one of many leading new efforts to rebuild Greenwood.
Creating Inclusive, Complete Communities
The third post in our series “Evolving Toward Inclusive Cities” argues that if we move away from racist and classist exclusionary housing practices and begin to embrace inclusionary policies, cities can adapt to be more livable for everybody and more inclusive to those who are currently excluded in our cities and towns. Thoughtful urban design – freed from the constraints of exclusionary policies – can lead to truly democratic spaces where no one is left behind.
Inclusionary Zoning and Housing Justice
The second post in our series “Evolving Toward Inclusive Cities” considers the efforts of cities across America to create inclusionary programs to combat this existing exclusion. In fact, there are now over 900 inclusionary housing programs in the United States! Some cities, for example, have developed affordable housing programs. Boulder, Colorado – where Caddis Collaborative grew up and has its offices – is one such city.
The Air We Breathe Isn’t “Natural”
The first post in our series “Evolving Toward Inclusive Cities” looks at housing segregation in America’s cities. Though it can feel like the world we live is simply the air that we breathe, exclusionary housing and zoning policies aren’t “natural” (as we assume they might be). How we live in our cities is actually no accident. There is a well-known, well-documented history of explicitly racist and classist policies that formed our cities through lending and zoning practices.
Understanding a Housing Development Budget
Confused by the relationship between the sale prices of the homes and the mixed composition of your cohousing community’s development budget? In this post, Caddis Collaborative provides a graphic you can use to understand this concept and to communicate with prospective members.






















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